New Zealand Labour shed votes to the right but also the left – the price of a progressive policy bonfire
The party's supporters feel like it got a kicking from everyone. After a dire result, analysts pointed to its inability to meet its lofty aspirations
It was an assessment with a distinctly New Zealand flavour. At the end of the day, there's one unavoidable reality," said Chris Hipkins, the defeated Labour prime minister, speaking to reporters after he conceded the country's election on Saturday. We lost because not enough people voted for us."
But that was only part of it. Hipkins' ruling, centre-left Labour party had crashed from the historic highs of its 2020 election result, in which it won 50% of the vote, to a dismal 27% on Saturday, nearly halving its seats in parliament. However, the punishing loss was not only a clear defeat by the right-leaning parties that will form the next government - the size and shape of which will be determined when a final vote tally is announced on 3 November; the blows also came from Labour's left.
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